• edric@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    The new home I purchased has a gas stove. Instead of replacing it, we’re planning to just buy a portable (pluggable) 1-plate induction cooktop as our primary cooking station, and use the gas stove for prolonged cooking like boiling rice/pasta or pressure cooking. It shouldn’t be an issue to plug the induction cooktp into one of the outlets in the kitchen right?

    • admiralteal@kbin.social
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      4 months ago

      Get an electric kettle, too. Boiling water on either a gas range or a standalone 110V induction hob is pretty slow, but can be jumpstarted in an electric kettle to spare a lot of headache.

      As someone who cooks a lot, gas ranges just plain suck to use. Don’t believe the astroturf. They take 20x more work to keep clean (which is honestly the only reason I need to hate them). They also heat pans super slowly (even my previous cheapo ceramic resistive electric range, which had a 5000W hob, heated pans faster than any gas range I’ve ever used), they irritate your eyes and fuck with your air quality (and thus require much more powerful vent hoods – which are loud and also suck your climate controlled out), and they rapidly heat up the room you use them in.

      Buy commercial if the hob is going to be your workhorse, though. The commercial ones are just built to a way higher standard compared to the cheapo import brands. They cost more and are ugly, but they will last you way longer. They tend to have things like powerful cooling fans – which can be a bit noisy, but it protects their electronics.

      I can’t speak for your local energy prices, but I’d be surprised if the gas is so much cheaper than electric that it is worth using the gas range for things that are going to be powered for a long time.

      Though they aren’t readily-available yet, there’s a new product category starting to appear that’s more renter-friendly for this – electric ranges with built-in batteries that run off regular 110VAC power. The prices are high, since you are also paying for a relatively large backup battery (that can run things like your fridge during a blackout, for example), but for many they are cheaper than the cost to have a 14/3 40A line run to the kitchen by an electrician.

      • edric@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        Get an electric kettle, too

        Yup, we definitely will. We also used to have one.

        Buy commercial if the hob is going to be your workhorse

        I’ll definitely shop around.

        but I’d be surprised if the gas is so much cheaper than electric that it is worth using the gas range for things that are going to be powered for a long time

        I actually have to compare once we move in. The house has solar panels, so I need to test if it would be cheaper overall to use induction vs the gas stove, or use both depending on the type of cooking.

    • IWantToFuckSpez@kbin.social
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      4 months ago

      No issue. Those are specifically made for a standard outlet. They are just less powerful than a full induction stove top that’s hooked up to a 240V line.

      • edric@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        Thanks, that’s a good point. I used to live in a country that uses 220V as standard, so we could easily plug in stand-alone induction cooktops anywhere.

    • guyrocket@kbin.social
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      4 months ago

      Right, assuming it’s made for that. But it won’t be anywhere near as powerful as a range. So it will work but not anywhere near as quickly.

      My induction range required crazy thick wiring. 8 gauge, I think? Getting that done by an electrician cost more than the range itself.

    • Bonehead@kbin.social
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      4 months ago

      It shouldn’t be an issue to plug the induction cooktup into one of the outlets in the kitchen right?

      Just make sure it’s the only thing powered on that circuit, since an induction hotplate can easily pull 1500 watts at full power. You could also get a 220v to 110v adapter and use the stove outlet for the induction hotplate, which should give you an isolated 20A circuit.

        • Bonehead@kbin.social
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          4 months ago

          You can’t say for sure. My house has a gas stove and a 220v outlet for an electric stove. Most houses are wired for an electric stove even if it has gas, because not everyone is going to want a gas stove and wiring an outlet is easier than running a gas line.

    • Vent@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      This is what I did. New induction stovetop for $5000 vs an induction cooktop for $50 that I can also take camping? Easy choice. We use the cooktop for a big toaster oven for everything, including pasta, so we only need to fire up the gas range if we absolutely need multiple burners or a ton of oven space.

      Our cooktop heats up water just about as fast as our electric kettle, which was surprising to me. I guess they both probably pull the same amount of power from the wall.

      Can’t recommend an induction cooktop enough. We got a Nuwave PIC, but I’m sure any cooktop will provide a similar great experience. If you end up getting a PIC, I recommend getting the case with it. We passed it up, but we’ve taken it camping a few times now and the case would have helped. It totally blows our camp stove out of the water.